04/22/13

Class XVI. MC’s Flow, the essay “Happiness Revisited” + New Reading

class 16. 4222013

Please read all of my notes carefully; please, as well, read last week’s notes in full. There are a few things due:  last week’s summary, this week’s summary, and you must read all of the excerpts from Flow. All will be attached, below and in previous posts. Make sure you are keeping up or there will be a quiz.

ENGL 2150 Class XVI. notes Happiness Revisited

Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi – Flow

(Here, make sure to read Ch.1, the essay entitled “Happiness Revisited”; as well, make sure, at the very least, then to read the section labeled “Enjoyment and  the Quality of Life” which goes from pgs. 52 to 76)

04/8/13

Class XIII + Albert Camus and The Myth of Sisyphus

ENGL 2150. class XIII Notes on Camus and The Myth o Sisyphus

ENGL 2150 summary exp and creative handout. 2013

As we switch gears and go into creative and/or expository summary modums (please read the handout care/fully), make sure you are actively reading, annotating, and engaging these next few texts, creatively and critically. No question should go unwritten or unasked. As well, find the new yet same reading attached, below.

Albert Camus – The Myth of Sisyphus

(This time, read from the Preface to the end of the essay, “An Absurd Reasoning”.)

03/5/13

Class IX + Diogenes part III + Kwame Appiah’s The Ethics of Identity + global citizenry

Class 9 global citizen ENGL 2150 CLASS IV Notes. spr 2013

Kwame Anthony Appiah – The Ethics of Identity

Above, please find my class notes and your new reading, from which you should only read the final section entitled “Rooted Cosmopolitanism.” Again, do NOT read the entire book; instead, read just the last section. However, if you want to read the entire book, it is here, for you. There is no class, tomorrow, Wednesday, 3/6/13.

02/6/13

Class IV // 2.6.13 // Concrete & Abstract Rhetoric // Voltaire and Bierce = New Readings

2613 board

Below, you will find the next two PDF files for the next two texts we will be reading:  Ambrose Bierce’s Unabridged Devil’s Dictionary and Voltaire’s Philosophical Dictionary. Both these texts we will spend a week on and they will help introduce us to two things:  definition (obviously) and the cynical abilities, or, Cynicism (neither of which are “bad” things). Please download them and let your curiosity take over. They are fun reads.

Also, below, you will find the in-class work which became the homework for Monday (2/11/13), the Revision Handout I.

Voltaire – Philosophical Dictionary

Ambrose Bierce – The Unabridged Devils Dictionary

ENGL 2150. Revision Handout I

02/4/13

Class III // 2.4.2013 // Plato’s “Meno”

board 1 2.4.13 board 2 2.4.13

You can find my own class notes, regarding “Meno” and business ethics based on Greek/Athenian views of ethical practices, below.

ENGL2150-Notes on Platos Meno BusinessEthics

Again, remember that the interlocutor (Meno) is the agent posing the questions which lead to the paradoxes (or to further understanding). As well, comparably, the market, or the consumer, could act as interlocutor when business-ethic practices are being questioned. We’ll review, further, on Wednesday. Please take a look at my notes (above) if you have any questions.

01/28/13

Class One // Jan. 28, 2013 // Axiology & What Astonishes Us

Jan 28 2013. ENGL 2150

Above, you will find the axiological list we made in response to the question:  what astonishes you.

Each student, as well, listed 3 concrete objects that he or she highly values — cars, iPods, wallets, keys, necklaces, etc… were listed.

Please print out Plato’s “Allegory of The Cave” (from the previous blog-post) and bring it to class on Wednesday; read and annotate the text and bring any questions you may have.

Enjoy the day!